Because of the previous awkward factoring of Origin we had two
implementations of Origin serializing and creation. Move the
implementation of DOMURL::url_origin into URL::origin, and
instead use the implemenation of URL::Origin::serialize for
serialization (replacing URL::serialize_origin).
This happens to fix 8 URL subtests as the two implemenations had
diverged, and URL::serialize_origin was previously missing the spec
changes of: whatwg/url@eee49fd and whatwg/url@fff33c3
While Origin is defined in the HTML spec - this leaves us with quite an
awkward relationship as the URL spec makes use of AO's from what is
defined in the HTML spec.
To simplify this factoring, relocate Origin into LibURL.
Along with putting functions in the URL namespace into a DOMURL
namespace.
This is done as LibWeb is in an awkward situation where it needs
two URL classes. AK::URL is the general purpose URL class which
is all that is needed in 95% of cases. URL in the Web namespace
is needed predominantly for interfacing with the javascript
interfaces.
Because of two URLs in the same namespace, AK::URL has had to be
used throughout LibWeb. If we move AK::URL into a URL namespace,
this becomes more painful - where ::URL::URL is required to
specify the constructor (and something like
::URL::create_with_url_or_path in other places).
To fix this problem - rename the class in LibWeb implementing the
URL IDL interface to DOMURL, along with moving the other Web URL
related classes into this DOMURL folder.
One could argue that this name also makes the situation a little
more clear in LibWeb for why these two URL classes need be used
in the first place.